PNB On Road For Annual Profit In Next Financial Year: Analysts

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The bank is expected to clock a net profit of Rs 2,266 crore for the year ending March 2020One year after being hit by a $2 billion scam,
Punjab National Bank (PNB) is set to return to annual profits and strong loan growth in fiscal year 2020 even as investigations continue
into the country's biggest banking fraud.State-run PNB has already surprised markets with an earlier-than-expected profit for the quarter
ended December 31 as it completed setting aside funds to cover for the scam and its bad loan levels eased.While the lender is still likely
to post a loss of Rs 5,984 crore ($837.16 million) for this fiscal year ending March 31, analysts expect PNB to return to a full-year profit
in the next fiscal year, according to Refinitiv data.The bank is expected to clock a net profit of Rs 2,266 crore for the year ending March
2020, which would be its highest annual profit in five years."The way the bank is shaping up, it is quite clear FY20 promises to be a much
cleaner and better year for them," said Abhinesh Vijayaraj, vice president equity research for Spark Capital Advisors (India).PNB's loan
growth is estimated to be 8.33 per cent for fiscal year 2020, its highest in 4 years, as per the mean of analysts' estimates from Refinitiv
Its total assets are projected to grow at the highest rate in three years.The lender said in February 2018 two jewellery groups used fake
bank guarantees issued by rogue staff to raise credit overseas, triggering a plunge in its stock and driving it to three straight quarterly
losses due to fraud-related provisions.PNB's loss for the quarter following the scam's discovery was also a massive $1.90 billion - the
biggest ever for an Indian lender.Industry trendMarket participants believe fiscal year 2020 will likely be good for other lenders as
well."It's going to be a good period for corporate lenders on the whole in FY20 as credit growth has picked up and asset quality-related
problems are largely behind us," said Alpesh Mehta, an analyst with Mumbai-based brokerage Motilal Oswal Securities.In FY20, State Bank of
India, the country's largest lender by assets, and smaller peer Bank of Baroda are expected to report their best annual profits since at
least 1998.PNB's shares have fallen about 56 per cent since mid-Feb last year
That plunge makes its shares undervalued compared to their valuation in previous years
It currently trades at a 12-month forward price to earnings ratio (PE) of 9.29 in comparison with the last five years' average of 15.7 and
last two years' average of 31.9.Analysts too feel the stock is currently undervalued after multiple infusions of capital by the government
Since January 2018, the government has infused close to $2 billion into PNB to help shore up capital and revive loan growth.Some analysts,
though, are cautious about PNB's prospects."The major concern is how has PNB changed their systems and processes following the scam, as it
was unimaginable that such a big fraud could take place at one bank," said Asutosh Mishra, head of research of institutional equity at
Ashika Stock Broking Ltd."Where will the bank be in three years is really the question," Spark Capital's Mr Vijayaraj said.($1 = Rs 71.48)